Skip to content

xenogenesi/hidclient

Folders and files

NameName
Last commit message
Last commit date

Latest commit

 

History

5 Commits
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Repository files navigation

hidclient

fork of Anselm Martin Hoffmeister's hidclient

hidclient is a Virtual Bluetooth® keyboard and mouse

What is this about?

The hidclient program makes a Bluetooth® technology equipped computer appear as a Bluetooth® keyboard and mouse device to other machines. Input events (like keystrokes and mouse movements) of the locally attached input devices will be forwarded to another machine via the Bluetooth® link. For the counterpart (which might be a Linux PC, a Win PC, a PDA...) there is no technical difference to "real" Bluetooth® input devices.

What will I need?

A Linux PC (or laptop, possibly a PDA would do...?) that runs the Bluez Software. Most distributions should supply this. A Bluetooth® dongle (USB-Stick...) for this machine Another device that is able to handle Bluetooth® input devices: A PC, PDA or similar (not necessarily running Linux!) The bluez header files (for compiling the sources) The hidclient source code (see below).

What am I allowed to do with this program?

Well, you may use it, read the source code, give the files to other people, change it - basically anything provided you stay within the limits of the GNU General Public License version 2 (or any later version, at your choice). This program is "free software" (both as in speech and in beer), you do not need to pay any royalties for using it. Keep with the GPL.

Build

hidclient depends on libbluetooth from bluez.

Compile hidclient.c with

gcc -o hidclient -O2 -lbluetooth -Wall hidclient.c

You don't need to copy anything into /etc/bluetooth. Might be a good idea to edit /etc/bluetooth/main.conf and set DisabledPlugins=input there, and Class=0x000540 - that helps identifying the device as a "keyboard". Now run

sudo ./hidclient -l

to list the available input devices. If you have for example two usb mice and want to export only one (while working locally on the other), select the ID number from the first column. Start hidclient with

sudo ./hidclient -e4 -x

where 4 is the number of your mouse. Hidclient will wait for bluetooth connections. The mouse should stop working on the local PC, so it will not interfere with your normal computer usage while it is connected to another device.

Use openvt along with hidclient so that keystrokes and mouse events captured will have no negative impact on the local machine (except Ctrl+Alt+[Fn/Entf/Pause]). Run

openvt -s -w hidclient

to run hidclient on a virtual text mode console for itself.

Or use -x, will "mute" the device(s) for X11 so you can start hidclient while having a X11 session.

With the -x parameter, you can ignore the openvt mentioned above.

The word trademark Bluetooth® is a registered trademark of the Bluetooth SIG.